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1.
J Anim Ecol ; 91(12): 2342-2347, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36479678

RESUMO

Research Highlight: Lundgren, E. J., Ramp, D., Middleton, O. S., Wooster, E. I. F., Kusch, E., Balisi, M., Ripple, W. J., Hasselerharm, C. D., Sanchez, J. N., Mills, M. & Wallach, A. D. (2022) A novel trophic cascade between cougars and feral donkeys shapes desert wetlands. Journal of Animal Ecology, (91, 2010-2022). https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13766. Despite being absent from most regions of the contemporary world, megafauna species dominated the dynamics of ecological communities until the late Pleistocene. Trophic rewilding is a promising approach to restoring megafauna interactions, their functional roles and the consequent trophic cascades. Unintentional rewilding with large non-native herbivores, such as equids, offers outstanding opportunities for ecologists to understand the outcomes of using replacement species to restore the ecological functions of extinct native megafauna. In this context, it is relevant to understand the extent to which extant native predators can impose top-down control on non-native megaherbivores and how trophic cascades arising from novel predator-prey interactions influences biodiversity and ecosystem functions. In Death Valley National Park (United States), Lundgren et al. depict a natural experiment showing compelling evidence of native cougars overcoming ecological naïveté-that is, the mismatches between predator and prey species that do not share a common evolutionary history-and are now successfully preying on younger individuals of feral donkeys. These non-native donkeys, whose growing wild populations threaten the native biota, became cougars' most frequent dietary item in that region. In areas with cougars, donkeys changed their spatiotemporal foraging patterns, becoming diurnal and less active. On the other hand, donkeys remain more active and forage throughout the day and night in areas without cougars. The cougar-donkey interaction triggered a behaviourally mediated trophic cascade emerging from a 'landscape of fear', that is, from the perception of spatial heterogeneity in predation risk by donkeys. Areas with cougars have less trampled ground, fewer donkey trails, and much more canopy cover and vegetation around water. Donkeys concentrate their activity mostly in topologically plain terrains lacking proper sites for the ambush behaviour of cougars and with more intense human presence, likely acting as a shield against the predators. Lundgren et al. present a promising model system for studying the effects of fearful grazers on community structure in the context of novel ecological interactions being established in the Anthropocene. Whether the emerging cascade is transient or persistent, the relative roles of consumptive and non-consumptive effects as underlying mechanisms, and their consequences for food web structure, functioning and stability, are questions of general interest. Addressing them can help us to elucidate the costs and benefits of using non-native megaherbivores in the functional restoration of permanently invaded ecosystems.


Pesquisa em Destaque: Lundgren, E. J., Ramp, D., Middleton, O. S., Wooster, E. I. F., Kusch, E., Balisi, M., Ripple, W. J., Hasselerharm, C. D., Sanchez, J. N., Mills, M. & Wallach, A. D. (2022) A novel trophic cascade between cougars and feral donkeys shapes desert wetlands. Journal of Animal Ecology, 00:00-00. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13766. Apesar de estarem ausentes da maioria das regiões do mundo contemporâneo, as espécies da megafauna dominaram a dinâmica das comunidades ecológicas até o Pleistoceno tardio. A refaunação trófica é uma abordagem promissora para a restauração das interações da megafauna, de seus papéis funcionais e das cascatas tróficas delas decorrentes. A refaunação não-intencional com grandes herbívoros não-nativos, tais como equídeos, oferece oportunidades extraordinárias para os ecólogos entenderem as consequências do uso de espécies substitutas para restaurar as funções ecológicas da extinta megafauna nativa. Nesse contexto, é relevante entendermos o quanto os predadores nativos atuais podem impor controle de cima para baixo sobre mega-herbívoros não-nativos, e como cascatas tróficas oriundas de novas interações predador-presa influenciam a biodiversidade e as funções ecossistêmicas. No Parque Nacional do Vale da Morte (Estados Unidos), Lundgren et al. reportam um experimento natural mostrando evidências contundentes de que onças pardas superaram a ingenuidade ecológica - i.e., os desajustes entre predadores e presas que não compartilham uma história evolutiva comum - e agora estão predando os indivíduos mais jovens de burros ferais com sucesso. Esses burros exóticos, cujas populações crescentes ameaçam a biota nativa, se tornaram o item mais frequente da dieta das onças pardas nessa região. Em áreas com onças pardas, os burros mudaram seus padrões espaço-temporais de forrageio, tornando-se diurnos e menos ativos. Por outro lado, os burros permanecem mais ativos e forrageiam durante o dia e à noite em áreas sem onças pardas. A interação entre onças pardas e burros desencadeou uma cascata trófica comportamentalmente mediada que emerge de uma "paisagem de medo", isto é, da percepção dos burros sobre a heterogeneidade espacial do risco de predação. Áreas com onças pardas tiveram menos solo pisoteado, menos trilhas de burros, e muito mais cobertura de dossel e vegetação no entorno da água. Os burros concentram a maior parte de suas atividades em terrenos topologicamente planos, os quais não apresentam lugares apropriados para o comportamento de emboscada das onças pardas e têm presença humana mais intensa, provavelmente agindo como escudos contra predadores. Lundgren et al. apresentam um sistema modelo promissor para o estudo de efeitos de pastadores temorosos sobre a estrutura comunitária no contexto de novas interações ecológicas em estabelecimento no Antropoceno. Se a cascata trófica emergente é transiente ou persistente, os papéis relativos dos efeitos diretos e indiretos como mecanismos subjacentes, e suas consequências para a estrutura, funcionamento e estabilidade da teia trófica são questões de interesse geral. Respondê-las pode nos ajudar a elucidar os custos e benefícios de usar mega-herbívoros não-nativos na restauração funcional de ecossistemas permanentemente invadidos.


Assuntos
Puma , Humanos , Animais , Equidae , Ecossistema , Ecologia
2.
Sci Adv ; 8(26): eabo5774, 2022 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35767624

RESUMO

In developing countries, outbreaks of zoonotic diseases (ZDs) result from intertwined ecological, socioeconomic, and demographic processes that shape conditions for (i) increased contact between vulnerable human population and wildlife in areas undergoing environmental degradation and (ii) the rapid geographic spread of infections across socially vulnerable regions. In Brazil, recent increases in environmental and social vulnerabilities, amplified by economic and political crises, are potential triggers for outbreaks. We discuss Brazilian features that favor outbreaks and show a novel quantitative method for zoonotic risk assessment. Using data on nine ZDs from 2001 to 2019, we found that the most significant causal variables were vegetation cover and city remoteness. Furthermore, 8 of 27 states presented low-level risk of ZD outbreaks. Given the ZD-bushmeat connection, we identified central hunted mammals that should be surveilled to prevent spillover events. The current challenge is to coordinate intersectoral collaboration for effective One Health management in megadiverse countries with high social vulnerability and growing environmental degradation like Brazil.

3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 13001, 2021 06 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34155241

RESUMO

Although international airports served as main entry points for SARS-CoV-2, the factors driving the uneven geographic spread of COVID-19 cases and deaths in Brazil remain mostly unknown. Here we show that three major factors influenced the early macro-geographical dynamics of COVID-19 in Brazil. Mathematical modeling revealed that the "super-spreading city" of São Paulo initially accounted for more than 85% of the case spread in the entire country. By adding only 16 other spreading cities, we accounted for 98-99% of the cases reported during the first 3 months of the pandemic in Brazil. Moreover, 26 federal highways accounted for about 30% of SARS-CoV-2's case spread. As cases increased in the Brazilian interior, the distribution of COVID-19 deaths began to correlate with the allocation of the country's intensive care units (ICUs), which is heavily weighted towards state capitals. Thus, severely ill patients living in the countryside had to be transported to state capitals to access ICU beds, creating a "boomerang effect" that contributed to skew the distribution of COVID-19 deaths. Therefore, if (i) a lockdown had been imposed earlier on in spreader-capitals, (ii) mandatory road traffic restrictions had been enforced, and (iii) a more equitable geographic distribution of ICU beds existed, the impact of COVID-19 in Brazil would be significantly lower.


Assuntos
COVID-19/prevenção & controle , COVID-19/transmissão , Portador Sadio/transmissão , Cuidados Críticos/métodos , Pandemias/prevenção & controle , Quarentena/métodos , SARS-CoV-2 , Doença Relacionada a Viagens , Automóveis , Brasil/epidemiologia , COVID-19/epidemiologia , COVID-19/virologia , Cidades/epidemiologia , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva , Modelos Teóricos
5.
Am Nat ; 183(3): 363-75, 2014 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24561599

RESUMO

Adaptive speciation can occur when a population undergoes assortative mating and disruptive selection caused by frequency-dependent intraspecific competition. However, other interactions, such as mutualisms based on trait matching, may generate conflicting selective pressures that constrain species diversification. We used individual-based simulations to explore how different types of mutualism affect adaptive diversification. A magic trait was assumed to simultaneously mediate mate choice, intraspecific competition, and mutualisms. In scenarios of intimate, specialized mutualisms, individuals interact with one or few individual mutualistic partners, and diversification is constrained only if the mutualism is obligate. In other scenarios, increasing numbers of different partners per individual limit diversification by generating stabilizing selection. Stabilizing selection emerges from the greater likelihood of trait mismatches for rare, extreme phenotypes than for common intermediate phenotypes. Constraints on diversification imposed by increased numbers of partners decrease if the trait matching degree has smaller positive effects on fitness. These results hold after the relaxation of various assumptions. When trait matching matters, mutualism-generated stabilizing selection would thus often constrain diversification in obligate mutualisms, such as ant-myrmecophyte associations, and in low-intimacy mutualisms, including plant-seed disperser systems. Hence, different processes, such as trait convergence favoring the incorporation of nonrelated species, are needed to explain the higher richness of low-intimacy assemblages--shown here to be up to 1 order of magnitude richer than high-intimacy systems.


Assuntos
Formigas/fisiologia , Dispersão de Sementes , Seleção Genética , Simbiose , Adaptação Biológica , Animais , Simulação por Computador , Modelos Biológicos , Reprodução
6.
Neotrop Entomol ; 35(4): 458-68, 2006.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17061793

RESUMO

A survey of the endophagous insects fauna associated to Asteraceae capitula was carried out from 2000 to 2002 in eight cerrado sensu stricto sites located in the Brazilian state of Sdo Paulo. Sixty-four endophagous species of Diptera and Lepidoptera were recorded from 49 asteracean host plants. Approximately half of the species were obtained from a single locality, with a large proportion emerging from a single sample (unicates). Thirty percent of the species were singletons (i.e. only one individual was recorded). The large proportion of rare species suggests a high species turnover among localities. Lepidopteran species were recorded on more host species than dipterans, confirming their more polyphagous food habit, also observed in other Brazilian biomes and in Europe. We conclude that the studied cerrado localities, all within São Paulo State, are isolated with its invertebrate fauna composed of many rare and exclusive species. We suggest that the maintenance of Asteraceae biodiversity and their endophagous insects depend on the conservation of all cerrado remnants in the state.


Assuntos
Asteraceae , Dípteros , Lepidópteros , Animais , Brasil , Ecossistema , Dinâmica Populacional
7.
Neotrop. entomol ; 35(4): 458-468, July-Aug. 2006. tab, graf
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: lil-451703

RESUMO

A survey of the endophagous insects fauna associated to Asteraceae capitula was carried out from 2000 to 2002 in eight cerrado sensu stricto sites located in the Brazilian state of São Paulo. Sixty-four endophagous species of Diptera and Lepidoptera were recorded from 49 asteracean host plants. Approximately half of the species were obtained from a single locality, with a large proportion emerging from a single sample (unicates). Thirty percent of the species were singletons (i.e. only one individual was recorded). The large proportion of rare species suggests a high species turnover among localities. Lepidopteran species were recorded on more host species than dipterans, confirming their more polyphagous food habit, also observed in other Brazilian biomes and in Europe. We conclude that the studied cerrado localities, all within São Paulo State, are isolated with its invertebrate fauna composed of many rare and exclusive species. We suggest that the maintenance of Asteraceae biodiversity and their endophagous insects depend on the conservation of all cerrado remnants in the state.


No presente estudo foi realizado um levantamento da fauna de insetos endófagos de capítulos de Asteraceae (Compostas), de 2000 a 2002, em oito localidades de cerrados sensu stricto no estado de São Paulo. Foram obtidas 64 espécies de endófagos (dípteros e lepidópteros) de 49 espécies de hospedeiras. Aproximadamente metade das espécies foi obtida de apenas uma área, e destas uma grande proporção ocorreu em apenas uma amostra (unicatas). Trinta por cento das espécies foram consideradas "singletons" (apenas um indivíduo foi obtido). A grande quantidade de espécies raras sugere uma forte troca de espécies entre diferentes áreas. Lepidópteros foram registrados em mais espécies hospedeiras que dípteros, confirmando o já observado para o mesmo sistema de insetos e plantas em outros ambientes no Brasil e Europa. As áreas de cerrado sensu stricto estudadas no estado de São Paulo encontram-se isoladas, com uma grande parte da fauna de invertebrados composta por muitas espécies raras e exclusivas. Diante deste quadro, sugere-se que a manutenção da biodiversidade de Asteraceae e seus endófagos em seus níveis atuais depende da conservação de todo o conjunto de remanescentes de cerrado do estado.


Assuntos
Animais , Asteraceae , Dípteros , Lepidópteros , Brasil , Ecossistema , Dinâmica Populacional
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